: 
[Plate 29.] 
THE CRIMPED GUELDRES ROSE. 
(VIBURNUM PLICATUM; var. DILATATA) 
A Greenhouse (?) Shrub, from China, belonging to the Natural Order o/Caprifoils 
£jjcctfic Character 
THE CRIMPED GUELDRES ROSE.— Leaves rounded 
at the base, ovate or roundish-ovate, abruptly pointed, finely 
serrate, closely ribbed and veined so as to appear plaited, 
smooth on the upper, closely downy on the under side ; 
flowers radiating, all sterile in the cultivated plant, 
enlarged and collected in a globose cyme. 
VIBURNUM PLICA TO/.— Folita e basi rotund W atis 
v. ovato-suborbicularibus cuspidatis a bH eerratis den 
venoso-costatiset plicatis superne glabra mhtmtomwUmt 
floribus radiantibus in planta culta omnibus fterilibim 
A\u+*t\* M in rvmam L'lobosara conesftk. 
Viburnum plicatum Thunlerg ; Siebold and Zuccarini, Fl. Japonica, I. 81, t 38 ; Botanical Register, 1847. t SI 
This plant, procured for the Horticultural Society by Mr. Fortune, is Ascribed in their Joum 
as "a handsome deciduous bush, bearing some resemblance to 
dentatumr Mr. Fortune says that 'it is a native of the northern parts of the Chine 
m 
him 
form 
numerous heads of snow-ball flowers, like the common 
pectecl 
"umcxuus iieuus oi snow- oau now era, uku mc w^ v - - . •» *, ± •* «^H w ^oWv 
Lardy in England , but this requires to be ascertained by aetnal tad. At any rate, ,t mil probably 
favourite 
fi..n ,, .. . tuA « Tins Viburnum is one of the most beautiful plants that 
oiebold and Zuccanm speak of it thus :— llus viDunmm i Q , f 
....,.- C ~ . m .__• LiK^fM that it inhabits bat ma, tue most 
are cultivated in Japan. 
southern province of Kiusia (31 
Now-a-days, it is seen in every garden. Its balls 
imported from China 
v 3 
